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US5515112A - Chrominance transition corrector - Google Patents

Chrominance transition corrector
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US5515112A
US5515112AUS08/357,884US35788494AUS5515112AUS 5515112 AUS5515112 AUS 5515112AUS 35788494 AUS35788494 AUS 35788494AUS 5515112 AUS5515112 AUS 5515112A
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chrominance
converted
components
corrected
high frequency
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US08/357,884
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Bruce J. Penney
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Tektronix Inc
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Tektronix Inc
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Assigned to TEKTRONIX, INC.reassignmentTEKTRONIX, INC.ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS).Assignors: PENNEY, BRUCE J.
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Abstract

A chrominance transition corrector for restoring chrominance transitions after they have been degraded by a limited bandwidth channel converts input luminance and chrominance components, which represent a video image, from the time to the frequency domain. Correction coefficients are determined from a low frequency portion of the converted luminance component and the converted chrominance components. Corrected high frequency portions of the chrominance components are generated from the correction coefficients and a high frequency portion of the converted luminance component. The resulting converted and corrected high frequency portion of the chrominance components are then converted back to the time domain to produce chrominance output components, the chrominance transitions having been corrected.

Description

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to color correction, and more particularly to a chrominance transition corrector for restoring chrominance transitions after they have been degraded by a limited bandwidth channel.
In typical television video images, chrominance transitions from one color to another are matched to luminance transitions. After passing through a bandwidth limited channel with less chrominance bandwidth than luminance bandwidth, the chrominance transitions may no longer match the luminance transitions. The resulting loss of chrominance resolution degrades picture quality and also causes problems in chroma keying, which depends on chrominance detail to generate control or key signals.
Some previous approaches to improving chrominance sharpness have used peaking circuits, which speed up transitions. A flaw of this approach is that even those transitions which are supposed to be slow are speeded up. This results in inaccurate renditions of picture detail.
What is desired is a chrominance transition corrector that restores chrominance transitions to match luminance transitions after the chrominance transitions have been degraded by a bandwidth limited channel.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
Accordingly the present invention provides a chrominance transition corrector that converts the chrominance and luminance component signals, which represent a video image, from the time domain to the frequency domain and separates the high and low frequency portions of each component signal. The respective low frequency chrominance portions are each combined with the low frequency luminance portion to generate a correction coefficient for each chrominance component. The correction coefficients are multiplied by the high frequency luminance portion to produce corrected high frequency chrominance portions. The corrected high frequency chrominance portions are combined with the respective low frequency chrominance portions to produce corrected chrominance components. The luminance component and corrected chrominance components are then converted back to the time domain for display or encoding into a composite video image.
The objects, advantages and other novel features of the present invention are apparent from the following detailed description when read in conjunction with the appended claims and attached drawing.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING
FIG. 1 is a block diagram view of a chrominance transition corrector according to the present invention.
FIG. 2 is a graphic view of an illustrative luminance component waveform signal in the time domain.
FIG. 3 is a graphic view of a corresponding illustrative chrominance component waveform signal in the time domain.
FIG. 4 is an expanded graphic view of a portion of FIG. 2.
FIG. 5 is an expanded graphic view of a portion of FIG. 3.
FIG. 6 is a graphic view of the luminance component signal of FIG. 2 in the frequency domain.
FIG. 7 is a graphic view of the chrominance component signal of FIG. 3 in the frequency domain.
FIG. 8 is a graphic view of a lowpass filter characteristic.
FIG. 9 is a graphic view of a highpass filter characteristic.
FIG. 10 is a graphic view of the lowpass filtered luminance component signal in the frequency domain.
FIG. 11 is a graphic view of the highpass filtered luminance component signal in the frequency domain.
FIG. 12 is a graphic view of a reconstructed chrominance component waveform signal in the time domain according to the present invention.
FIG. 13 is a graphic view of a portion of the reconstructed chrominance waveform signal of FIG. 12.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
Referring now to FIG. 1 achrominance transition corrector 10 has as inputs a luminance component Y and two chrominance components Pb, Pr which represent a video image. The luminance component is a wideband signal, while the chrominance components are bandwidth limited relative to the luminance component. The components are input to respective time tofrequency domain converters 12, 14, 16. The output from the luminance time tofrequency domain converter 12 is input to a pair of filters, alowpass filter 12a and ahighpass filter 12b that each provide a low frequency portion YLF and a high frequency portion YHF for the luminance component. Similar filtering may be done at the outputs of the chrominance time tofrequency converters 14, 16, however only the low frequency chrominance component outputs are used. As is well known, the time to frequency domain conversion may be performed by a discrete Fourier transform (DFT), a discrete cosine transform (DCT) or other appropriate transform. In a typical application luminance Y may have a 4 Mhz bandwidth while chrominance Pb, Pr may have an 800 kHz bandwidth. In this case low frequency LF means below 800 kHz and high frequency HF means 800 kHz to 4 Mhz. The low frequency luminance portion YLF iS input to a pair ofcorrection coefficient circuits 18, 20. One low frequency chrominance portion PbLF is input to one of thecorrection coefficient circuits 18, and the other low frequency chrominance portion PrLF is input to the othercorrection coefficient circuit 20 to produce a pair of correction coefficients Kb, Kr according to the following equations:
K.sub.b =P.sub.bLF /Y.sub.LF ;K.sub.r =P.sub.rLF /Y.sub.LF.
In this example thecorrection coefficient circuits 18, 20 may be divider circuits.
The pair of correction coefficients are input together with the high frequency luminance portion to a pair ofmultipliers 22, 24 to produce corrected high frequency chrominance portions PbHF, PrHF. The high and low frequency luminance portions and the low and corrected high frequency chrominance portions are combined bysummation circuits 26a, 28a , 30a and input to respective frequency totime domain converters 26, 28, 30 to produce output luminance and chrominance components Yout, Pbout, Prout, Alternatively the input luminance component Y may be taken directly as the output luminance component, as shown bydotted line 32, eliminating the need for the luminance frequency totime converter 26. These output components may be displayed or encoded to form a composite video signal.
As an illustration of the operation of thechrominance transition corrector 10 fast Fourier transform (FFT) circuits are used as the time tofrequency converters 12, 14, 16. Normally an FFT function results in a complex spectrum in which two quadrature components, real and imaginary, are processed. However for the purpose of simplifying this illustration, the signal being processed has time symmetric luminance and chrominance waveforms, as shown in FIGS. 2 and 3, resulting in the imaginary components being zero, i.e., not being processed. FIG. 2 shows a representative luminance signal with a transition from 0 to 1 volt and a risetime of about 2 clock cycles. The associated chrominance signal has a transition from -0.25 to 0.25 volt and a risetime, as shown in FIG. 3, of about 8 clock cycles. Both waveforms are shown expanded in FIGS. 4 and 5.
The spectra of these luminance and chrominance signals, shown in FIGS. 6 and 7, show that the luminance and chrominance signals have similar spectral shapes, but that the chrominance spectrum is missing the high frequency components. Particularly note in the luminance spectrum that spectral peaks exist out to higher frequencies than for the corresponding chrominance spectrum. Thefilter 12a, 12b characteristics are shown in FIGS. 8 and 9 to obtain low frequency and high frequency luminance components, as shown in FIGS. 10 and 11, from which a new chrominance signal is to be reconstructed. Thelow frequency filter 12a selects the low frequency portion of the luminance signal. Thehigh frequency filter 12b selects the high frequency component of the luminance signal. Optionallow frequency filters 14a, 16a assure that the chrominance component is bandwidth limited to be compatible with the luminance lowpass filtering. Since in this example the ratio of chrominance amplitude to luminance amplitude is 0.5, i.e., the outputs from thecoefficient circuits 18, 20 are each 0.5, the high frequency luminance component is scaled by 0.5 before being added to the low frequency chrominance components by thesummations circuits 28a, 30a at the inputs of the chrominance frequency totime domain converters 28, 30.
The true low frequency chrominance components from the time tofrequency domain converters 14, 16 are added to the newly synthesized high frequency chrominance components to give a corrected chrominance spectrum. Taking the inverse FFT of the corrected chrominance spectrum gives the corrected chrominance waveform as shown in FIGS. 12 and 13 for comparison with FIGS. 3 and 5.
Although this example used a time symmetric waveform to make the explanation simpler, in actual application both outputs of the FFT are used. Alternately a transform with only real output components, such as a DCT, could be used. This illustration also used a 256 point transform, while actual applications use a substantially smaller transform with appropriate windowing. Further the transition corrector is not limited to horizontal transitions. Some television systems, such as PAL, may have reduced vertical chrominance bandwidth which may be corrected by applying the transition corrector to a vertical array of sample points. Also compressed video, such as 4:2:0 MPEG, may have both reduced horizontal and vertical resolution, so that the transition corrector is applied to both a vertical and horizontal array of sample points.
Thus the present invention provides a chrominance transition corrector, restoring chrominance transitions after they have been degraded by a limited bandwidth channel, by determining chrominance component correction coefficients in the frequency domain from the low frequency portions of the luminance and chrominance components, using the correction coefficients and the high frequency luminance portion to generate corrected high frequency chrominance portions, and then converting the components back to the time domain.

Claims (6)

What is claimed is:
1. A chrominance transition corrector comprising:
first means for converting a luminance and two bandwidth limited chrominance components representing a video image from a time to a frequency domain, the converted luminance component being separated into a high and a low frequency portion;
means for determining a pair of chrominance correction coefficients from the low frequency luminance portion and the converted chrominance components;
means for generating from the correction coefficients and the high frequency luminance portion corrected high frequency chrominance components; and
second means for converting the converted and corrected high frequency chrominance components to the time domain to produce corresponding chrominance output components, the chrominance output components being transition corrected.
2. The chrominance transition corrector as recited in claim 1 wherein the first converting means comprises:
a time to frequency domain converter selected from the group consisting of a fast Fourier transform converter, a discrete cosine transform converter and a discrete Fourier transform converter for converting the luminance component into the converted luminance component; and
means for separating the converted luminance component into the high and low frequency portions.
3. The chrominance transition corrector as recited in claim 1 wherein the determining means comprises means for dividing each converted chrominance component by the low frequency portion of the converted luminance component to produce the correction coefficients.
4. The chrominance transition corrector as recited in claim 1 wherein the generating means comprises means for multiplying the high frequency portion of the converted luminance component by the correction coefficients to produce the corrected high frequency chrominance components.
5. The chrominance transition corrector as recited in claim 1 wherein the second converting means comprises:
means for combining the corrected high frequency chrominance components with the respective converted chrominance components to produce corrected chrominance components; and
a frequency to time domain converters selected from the group consisting of an inverse fast Fourier transform converter, an inverse discrete cosine transform converter and an inverse discrete Fourier transform converter corresponding to the first converting means to produce from the corrected chrominance components the chrominance output components.
6. The chrominance transition corrector as recited in claim 1 further comprising means for lowpass filtering the converted chrominance components to correspond to the low frequency portion of the converted luminance component prior to input to the determining and second converting means.
US08/357,8841994-12-191994-12-19Chrominance transition correctorExpired - LifetimeUS5515112A (en)

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US08/357,884US5515112A (en)1994-12-191994-12-19Chrominance transition corrector
JP7346098AJPH08256354A (en)1994-12-191995-12-11 Chrominance transition corrector
DE19546956ADE19546956A1 (en)1994-12-191995-12-15 Correction device for chrominance transitions

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Cited By (12)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication numberPriority datePublication dateAssigneeTitle
US5793885A (en)*1995-01-311998-08-11International Business Machines CorporationComputationally efficient low-artifact system for spatially filtering digital color images
US5936682A (en)*1996-07-091999-08-10Stmicroelectronics S.R.L.Circuit for enhancing chrominance transitions in real-time video reception
US5982455A (en)*1996-04-171999-11-09Quantel LimitedSignal processing system
US6175663B1 (en)*1998-02-242001-01-16Paravision Imaging, Inc.Method and apparatus for preserving background continuity in images
US6181385B1 (en)*1997-05-282001-01-30Deutsche Thomson-Brandt GmbhMethod for processing transitional regions in a picture signal
WO2001045389A1 (en)*1999-12-172001-06-21Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V.Signal peaking
US6266088B1 (en)*1996-07-152001-07-24Nec CorporationMethod of edge crispening in color image sensor and circuit for carrying out the same
US20020071612A1 (en)*2000-12-072002-06-13Pine Joshua I.Imaging system for minimizing pixel defects
US6421468B1 (en)*1999-01-062002-07-16Seiko Epson CorporationMethod and apparatus for sharpening an image by scaling elements of a frequency-domain representation
US6510242B1 (en)*1999-10-262003-01-21Sharp Laboratories Of America, Inc.Color image enhancement during YCbCr to RGB color conversion
US20050276486A1 (en)*2004-06-152005-12-15Withers William DData transform for improved compression of multicomponent images
US20090073319A1 (en)*2007-09-142009-03-19Darren NeumanMethod and System for Processing Chroma Signals

Families Citing this family (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication numberPriority datePublication dateAssigneeTitle
KR100839916B1 (en)*2006-12-142008-06-20연세대학교 산학협력단 Apparatus and method for removing color bleeding considering luminance-chromatic correlation
JP6403720B2 (en)*2016-06-212018-10-10キヤノン株式会社 Image processing apparatus, image processing method, and computer program

Citations (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication numberPriority datePublication dateAssigneeTitle
US4812905A (en)*1988-01-151989-03-14Rossi John PSystem for compensating for the violation of the constant luminance principle in color television systems

Patent Citations (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication numberPriority datePublication dateAssigneeTitle
US4812905A (en)*1988-01-151989-03-14Rossi John PSystem for compensating for the violation of the constant luminance principle in color television systems

Cited By (15)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication numberPriority datePublication dateAssigneeTitle
US5793885A (en)*1995-01-311998-08-11International Business Machines CorporationComputationally efficient low-artifact system for spatially filtering digital color images
US5982455A (en)*1996-04-171999-11-09Quantel LimitedSignal processing system
US5936682A (en)*1996-07-091999-08-10Stmicroelectronics S.R.L.Circuit for enhancing chrominance transitions in real-time video reception
US6266088B1 (en)*1996-07-152001-07-24Nec CorporationMethod of edge crispening in color image sensor and circuit for carrying out the same
US6181385B1 (en)*1997-05-282001-01-30Deutsche Thomson-Brandt GmbhMethod for processing transitional regions in a picture signal
US6175663B1 (en)*1998-02-242001-01-16Paravision Imaging, Inc.Method and apparatus for preserving background continuity in images
US6421468B1 (en)*1999-01-062002-07-16Seiko Epson CorporationMethod and apparatus for sharpening an image by scaling elements of a frequency-domain representation
US6510242B1 (en)*1999-10-262003-01-21Sharp Laboratories Of America, Inc.Color image enhancement during YCbCr to RGB color conversion
WO2001045389A1 (en)*1999-12-172001-06-21Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V.Signal peaking
US20020071612A1 (en)*2000-12-072002-06-13Pine Joshua I.Imaging system for minimizing pixel defects
US7053942B2 (en)*2000-12-072006-05-30Ess Technology, Inc.Imaging system and method applying transformer lens and digital image reconstruction
US20050276486A1 (en)*2004-06-152005-12-15Withers William DData transform for improved compression of multicomponent images
US7376277B2 (en)*2004-06-152008-05-20Pegasus Imaging CorporationData transform for improved compression of multicomponent images
US20090073319A1 (en)*2007-09-142009-03-19Darren NeumanMethod and System for Processing Chroma Signals
US8754990B2 (en)*2007-09-142014-06-17Broadcom CorporationMethod and system for processing chroma signals

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DE19546956A1 (en)1996-06-20

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